I alluded last week to
the deceptive potential of a
testimony. But it is clear in
Scripture and in life that an honest retelling of what the Lord has done can be
a powerful encouragement as well. It's
not always easy to put it into words though. That's what I've been wrestling
with this week--how to boil down the story of God's working in my life to a
blog-bite's worth of text.
When I was a kid we went to 'Testimony
Meeting' on Wednesday nights at church.
The service was a short one. It opened with a few hymns and then the
microphone was turned over to whosoever-will-may-come! There were various regulars, some more
predictable than others. Mostly it was
the grown-ups that made their way up to the microphone to say a bit. But there was this wild-card. When Mr. T led the service one never knew
what might happen.
Now I admired Mr.
T. He radiated a love for the Lord and
for His creation. He was an avid bird watcher and he was also my highschool
Bible teacher. But when he led testimony
meeting it could be intimidating. For he
was very eager for the 'young people' to be a part of the service. And he didn't mind making it happen. Every so often he would verbally lasso the whole
lot of us. And we'd find ourselves
lining up at the front to take a turn at the microphone dispensing a 'testimony'
of what God had done in our lives that week or that year, or
once-upon-a-lifetime-and-worth-repeating.
This could be very uncomfortable, especially if you couldn't quite
figure what there was to say, beyond what you'd already said the last time this
happened! To make the matter even more
intimidating, the first half hour of
these services was broadcast over the radio! And this was not small-town radio. Our testimonies would reach all the way to New York City ! There was definitely pressure to have
something worth saying!
We youth usually came up with something
fairly formulaic to say, patterned after our elders and kept very brief: "I'm thankful that God saved me and I'm
on my way to heaven" or something
of that nature. Rarely would we
volunteer a testimony and how well I
remember the uneasy tension of waiting till we were off the hook and the
meeting over.
I've grown up quite a
lot since then and have experienced the Lord's good hand in many more
situations but still this week I've been grappling with how to give a
'testimony' here that would be of some encouragement and not merely a glorified
personal history. A classic salvation
testimony is supposed to tell the before, the 'then what', and the after. Ideally there should be a big contrast of
'before' and 'after' and just enough spice thrown in so the listener can relate
and be 'wow'ed by the obvious transformation without being dragged through the
messy details. Well, that's not my history.
Mine is a rather 'boring' story given those parameters. For I
was born into a Christian heritage of believing parents and grandparents on
both sides. I grew up with believing
cousins, surrounded by a community of dedicated Christians in our own little
protected world. We not only sang hymns
and read the Word responsively together.
We ate together after church and the people we saw on Sunday we went to
school with and were taught by on Monday. In the summers these were the ones we
picked strawberries with on Saturdays and even swam with at our own local
pool. Into this heritage I was born, as
my parents had been born before me.
Still, I remember a
moment of personal 'decision'.
I was ten I think,
when I went forward with my friends at the close of an evening service to kneel
at the bench and pray. I didn't
anticipate it being a life-changing moment in my life. It just seemed like the right thing to
do. It's what people did at Camp
Meeting. You prayed around the 'altar'
(beautiful low wooden benches) following the official closing of the
service. And maybe there would be more
singing, and maybe if people were very happy there'd be marching around the
perimeter of the auditorium and back up the center aisle, just for the joy of
it. That was Camp Meeting.
But this particular evening
a wise older lady knelt beside me and asked if I knew that Jesus had died for
my sins and whether I had ever prayed to receive Him as my personal
Saviour. I supposed that I hadn't but it
certainly seemed the right thing to do.
So I did. As did my friends. And we were very pleased with ourselves on
rising from our knees. And happy to know
Jesus was in our hearts. As I recall we
dashed out the side door into the balmy summer evening bubbling over with joy. But really, it's a bit of a foggy memory for me. Though I have a definite
recollection of Mrs. Wolfram's gentle entreaty to me but I couldn't tell you if
there was a dramatic change in my life after that. Maybe so. I don't remember. So much for the crucial 'before' and 'after'
of a good testimony!
Mine has always been a
'boring' testimony consequently. But the
older and wiser I grow the more grateful I am for a 'boring' story. It is the one God has scripted for me to walk
out for His glory. He eased me into this
faith I call my own. He did the drawing and shaping and destining me for what I
would become. Even the temperament with
which I was born was His doing. I was a
child eager to conform to others' expectations of me. Having grown up in an atmosphere of devotion
and service to God it was as natural as breathing to follow in this path.
Here of course is a
potential deception. For children are
not born like radiant sunflowers pointing God-ward. We are born in sin and bent on having the
world revolve around us. I was no
different. It's just that pleasing
others pleased me. My motives were self-serving. Only in retrospect do I see
the great mercy of God in welcoming me to His family despite my very limited
awareness of my desperate plight.
I assented to needing a Saviour
but, conscientious pleaser that I was, I thought I was pretty good already.
(I've been unlearning that every since! It's been no small feat, but God is
faithful.)
So that was the
beginning of my 'testimony' as I see it.
Perhaps the clearest evidence of God's spirit at work in me though was
my love for His Word. I cannot remember
a time when it was not important to me.
I had the advantage of Christian schooling, and dedicated teachers that
taught us to memorize it and to personalize what we were reading by asking
questions of the text and noticing the details.
That was Junior High. Reading the
Bible through in a year was a challenge we kids all took up more than once. My parents modelled a dedication to reading
the Word. Their morning quiet times were a part of my definition of
morning!
What was missing
though was a reminder of the difference it makes to know Jesus. Because I didn't rub shoulders with 'the
world' I lacked this appreciation. The Word began to seem same-ish and old like
stale bread. I didn't see it changing lives. Then God sent Audrey. She was a top-notch student, eager and
studious. She even liked History class,
which I did not. Unlike me she wasn't
afraid to ask questions and we became good friends. But she was not like my other friends from
childhood. She hadn't grown up in our
kind of church. Her mother was staunchly
religious but not approving of the evangelical idea of salvation in a personal
sense. However, Audrey's parents had
recently divorced and Audrey was interested in a relational God. One night at youth group she asked me how she
could become a Christian. True to form I
doubted I could get her there so I took her to George, our leader, and he had
the honor of introducing her to Jesus.
That's when life began to change, for her and for me. Overnight she developed an insatiable
appetite and enthusiasm for the Word of God.
She copied down verses on wee scraps of paper to share with me each morning at school. Little verses jumped off the page and into
her heart--promises and sweet truths she was seeing for the first time. And her enthusiasm was contagious. It revived my
faith. We grew together, played guitar
together, wrote songs and ate ice cream on waffles. She was God's gift to my life that year, just
when I needed it. She was pulled out of
my school and my life the following year.
This sort of faith was too radical; it ran counter to her mother's form
of religion. So ended our friendship and so began an intense testing
of her newfound faith. But that is her
story to tell.
As for mine, God had
plans I wouldn't have dreamed of. I
wasn't much of a dreamer really, just a quiet somebody content to have a few
friends, to read my Bible and to love the natural world around me. I imagined growing old in my childhood home
in New Jersey beside a little woods with a little stream running through and a
little lake for skating when it froze a little in the winter...Mine was a small
and protected world that I had no particular interest in leaving, but God had
bigger dreams for me. To Him I owe all that I am, all I have and all that I will
yet become. It's His doings. He has
carried me all the way...The journey has been a good one.
That is hardly the
place to stop my testimony but for this week it will have to suffice. Hopefully next week I can commence another
installment without such a struggle to 'step up to the microphone' and find
something worth saying!
Thanks for your
patience,
--LS
"He chose our
heritage for us..." Ps.47:4
"Listen to me, O
house of Jacob...who have been borne by me from before your birth, carried from
the womb; even to your old age I am He, and to gray hairs I will carry
you. I have made, and I will bear; I
will carry and will save." Ps.46:3,4
3 comments:
Love the psalm at the bottom...mine was a radical conversion from an atheist to a believer, so it is a bit hard to understand what it could be like raised in the gospel...what a glorious thing to have that heritage in your life....it was good to hear your story! You seem to be the exception for church kids nowadays....few seem to want to fully embrace Jesus, beyond the religion, if that...the mystery of how God captures the human heart....
Good to get some of the story behind all the other stories!
"The wind/spirit blows where it wishes, and you hear its sound, but you do not know where it come from or where it goes. So it is with everyone who is born of the Spirit." So much mystery involved in salvation. We only see a bit of the story...I think God's grace will amaze us ever so much more when we see what we've missed in the retelling.
As for 'church kids nowadays', I think so much depends on what they see the adults living out.
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